The heat press is a little more involved. Not sure what everyone else is doing, but I use a GBC Titan. I do like cold/dry mounting. I use gatorboard that's prepped with the Arctic mount adhesive, then the graphic is applied afterwards, which is printed on high gloss paper using dye sub inks. Heat pressing also involves prepping the boards ahead of time, depending on what you're doing. A low-melt lamination or window adhesive or something like that. It really comes down to what venue your doing this for and what materials you are dealing with. Can you give us some more info?

for what Ive been reading and researching I see that dry mount presses uses dry mount tissues to mount pictures
on to boards,but what i dont understand is if I can use the tissue also with heat press!
I dont see the difference between the 2 presses.

I would like make design objects, especially for home such as placemats, coaster, but I dont really want to just
stop there, Im a travel photographer and I would like as well to mount my pictures on to some nice boards for
selling them and for exhibitions (obviously small size we talking here A3+ maximun size)...
I would like to buy a versatile press!

But Im very confused in all honesty..
For dye and subliminal transfer I nee an epson 1400, fine I could buy that one for subliminal, but I have a
stylus r2400, great for black n white pictures...can I use my printer with some dry mounting tissue, mount the
pics onto small boards and then laminate the result to make it heat resistant?

Do you need to do dye sub? Probably not. I've never seen the press you linked to used for pressing material on stuff other than garments, but that's just me. Others can chime in. Most tissue activates around 170F/77C, so I guess it's possible to do this, but I've never seen it done. And you would have to experiment to find out. Theoretically, it could work. There are tissues that can be pressed hot or cold and many hot ones that can be reopened again by using a higher temperature.

Wow, am I behind. I didn't realize my Bogen 510 dry mount press (also a clam press) is discontinued. The press you link to
should work with dry mount tissue. You need to buy the size you plan to mount prints. Kodak tissue is the most commonly
found in camera shops and has worked with prints from labs and my R2400. I also use a hand (Coverite Black Baron)
sealing iron to touch spot the tissue to the back of the print before triming and pressing. The key is as mentioned,
temperature and time. I tend to use lower temps (~200 F) and longer times (45-50 seconds) for 4x6 prints on cards. I
haven't seen fading yet over 3+ years now.

But with everything for this type of work, read the specifications and instructions.

I don't think there is a difference between heat presses and dry mount presses. I have a Seal dry mount press and it applies pressure and heat and heat presses seem to do the same thing. I use Seal Buffermount dry mount tissue and apply 170 degrees F for 30 to 60 seconds for matte paper only. HOWEVER, be warned that most inkjet paper CANNOT be mounted using this method. It appears that only matte papers will work with this method. All other papers it seems suffer more or less surface damage (shiny and non-shiny blotches) and may show fine dark lines in areas like clear blue skies. For those paper use a spray can and roller or have them mounted with a vacuum press.